I've been in the process of quitting smoking for nearly two years. It's been an uphill battle of false starts, nicotine withdrawals, elephantine levels of caffeine and an angry spouse.
I want to quit. Desperately. It's just too damn bad I love tobacco and its wonderfully stimulating effects. So since I gave up the cigarette habit, I've been keeping a close eye on the world of vaporizers.
Primarily used as an alternative form of smoking various herbs (yes, that one too), vaporizers heat up dried plant material to a level just below the point of combustion. The plant matter gets hot enough that the active ingredients are extracted in a vapor, but there's no smoke and no fire. You inhale just like you would off a cigarette or pipe. The only evidence that you've taken in anything other than warm air is a barely noticeable puff of thin vapor when you exhale. No visual particulates, no acrid smoke.
>Primarily used as an alternative form of smoking various herbs (yes, that one too), vaporizers heat up dried plant material to a level just below the point of combustion.
Most vaporizers are big and bulky – table-top appliances to be left in the home. There are portable models available, but they are imperfect, delicate, and often very expensive.
Then there's the Pax, a pocket-sized, rechargeable vaporizer that costs $250. It's designed in San Francisco by Ploom and manufactured in China. It's more attractive and more user-friendly than any other vaporizer I've seen. After a few weeks of using it, I believe it could do for alternative smoking methods what the iPod did for MP3s – take an existing, but nascent, technology and propel it into the mainstream.
The Pax measures a little over four inches long and about an inch and a half wide, with a subtly curved aluminum frame. The materials and the quality of the finish equal what's found on a premium mobile device. On the bottom is a removable, magnetized lid that covers the stainless steel "oven" and keeps your smokeables in place. At the top is a mouthpiece that, when depressed, pops out and activates the heating element.
Ploom recommends grinding your herbs into relatively fine pieces and lightly tamping them down into the bowl with the magnetized lid. After loading it, you push the mouthpiece down to switch it on. The mouthpiece pops back out and a star-shaped light on the body begins glowing purple as the oven begins to heat.
It takes about 20 to 30 seconds for the Pax to get up to operating (and vaporizing) temperature. When the Pax is ready for puffing, the star-shaped light glows green.